music in the park san jose

.Friday Must Reads: Bay Bridge Rod Fails Test; Labor and Liberal Groups Push to Reform Prop 13

music in the park san jose
Stories you shouldn’t miss:

1. A steel rod in the new Bay Bridge’s signature tower failed a key test, thereby raising concerns that it snapped from corrosion and that other rods may do the same during a major earthquake, the Chron reports. Caltrans and the bridge’s private contractors had mistakenly allowed the rods to soak in water for years, exposing them to corrosion. If the rods fail in a quake it could cause a catastrophic collapse of the $6.4 billion span — a bridge that was built to replace the old seismically unsafe one.

2. A coalition of labor and liberal groups, including many churches, has launched a campaign to reform Prop 13, and eliminate the property tax exemption for commercial holdings, the SacBee$ reports. Closing the commercial property loophole would generate about $9 billion a year in state revenues — much of which would go to public schools. California public schools, once the envy of the nation, have been in a long decline since Prop 13 took effect in the late 1970s, during Jerry Brown’s first stint as governor.

[jump]
3. Environmental groups have sued to immediately block oil companies from injecting toxic wastewater into underground aquifers in California, the Chron$ reports. The wastewater injections threaten to pollute drinking water supplies.

4. Because of the drought, East Bay residents should expect the return of foul-tasting water on Sunday, according to East Bay MUD, the Chron$ reports. The acrid taste comes from a drought-induced nontoxic algae bloom in East Bay MUD’s main reservoir in the Sierra foothills.

5. The track problem that forced the shut down of BART on Wednesday may have been caused by a bad weld, the Bay Area News Group$ reports.

6. The San Francisco District Attorney’s Office has dismissed eight criminal cases because of the scandal involving racist and bigoted texts sent by twelve members of SFPD, the Chron reports. The DA’s office is reviewing about 3,000 cases involving those officers.

7. Federal officials say the Richmond Housing Authority has shown significant improvement over the past year, the CoCo Times$ reports.

8. Undocumented student activists disrupted UC President Janet Napolitano’s speech yesterday in Oakland, the Bay Area News Group$ reports.

9. And a federal appeals court ruled unanimously that the NSA’s collection of mass metadata of phone calls by Americans is illegal, the LA Times$ reports. The unlawful NSA program was revealed by whistleblower Edward Snowden.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

East Bay Express E-edition East Bay Express E-edition
music in the park san jose
19,045FansLike
14,681FollowersFollow
61,790FollowersFollow
spot_img